Users can select to show simple informative notes on basically what each guideline and success criteria means, often with a common example. (so they grok the basic meaning -- then be able to drill down to the normative wording and technical details)

[note: we don't currently have that content, but have been working on it in various places]

I've worked with WCAG 1.0 (or other) and am fairly familiar with it and accessibility in general. I want to skim through the high-level requirements for WCAG 2.0, and then drill down to more details for specific points that I need more information on.

2. Just the basics, new to accessibility

I don't know anything about web accessibility and want to get a general idea of what is covered in WCAG 2.0. I don't need to know the technical details now, just to understand the basics. [is this met by WCAG at a Glance? or are we saying more info is needed?]

3. Simple site, medium skill level developers

I'm a student (or mom-and-pop shop web developer) doing a basic website using HTML and CSS. I don't have any video or scripting. I do have one form. I want to make the website meet WCAG 2.0. It's all soooo complex, though. I want to get rid of info for multimedia, etc. that I'm not using and get a simple checklist.

4. Checklist, complex site

We're redesigning our complex website and need to make it meet WCAG 2.0. We're working on a prototype. I want to have an interactive checklist where I can check off the things we've already done, and update it as we meet other SC.

5. Evaluating a website

I know WCAG 2.0 pretty well, and am using this as a checklist. @@

Tasks:

@@...

6. Older user researcher or developers

...

7. Trainers

...

8. Policy, manager, procurement

... e.g., want to learn about difference between Level A and Level AA, and impact on a project.
[might fall out of scope to have such a high level view]